The Dallas Cowboys and Blue Star Land have added another company to The Star in Frisco: PlainsCapital Bank.

The Dallas-based bank has signed two new leases — a 5,083-square-foot office lease and a 4,000-square-foot retail lease — within the One Cowboys Way in Frisco, which is the world corporate headquarters of the Cowboys.

Newly released plans for The Star project also show that three office buildings will be built along the tollway and Warren Parkway, adjacent to the new apartment tower. The office buildings will range from seven to 12 stories tall and will include parking garages on the high-profile corner of the tollway and Warren Parkway, according to plans filed with Frisco.

The Plano ISD school board is talking about adjusting the start/end dates of school years so that graduations can take place in The Star without any conflicts. How ever did people manage to graduate in the past without it?

The_Overdog wrote:The Plano ISD school board is talking about adjusting the start/end dates of school years so that graduations can take place in The Star without any conflicts. How ever did people manage to graduate in the past without it?

The_Overdog wrote:The Plano ISD school board is talking about adjusting the start/end dates of school years so that graduations can take place in The Star without any conflicts. How ever did people manage to graduate in the past without it?

The old downtown is still growing - there's an apartment building under construction now that replaced some small city buildings and some of the old places have closed (unfortunate) to be replaced by living space. But the city hasn't done anything else, like lure a fancy hotel (all along E/W sides of US75) or any kind of special attraction. I guess they are content to add local population for now.

Well Frisco (and Plano or any of the burbs but Plano makes slightly a smidgen more sense) was never in the running for Amazon to begin with, especially not after embarrassing themselves with their half assed proposal they sent in. Never met any of the requirements Amazon set forth for HQ2 and Amazon last week was touring the potential sites in downtown Dallas.

In the days of EDS and Frito-Lay and blue wool suits, I guess Plano could get away with being a fresh but somewhat boring brand. Lately with infrastructure beginning to age, more stylish housing stock further north, a growing airport owned by county seat McKinney, and a municipal name that resembles most closely, uh, "Plain," "Plain old," "Drāno," and "Bland," it will take more than Legacy West to stay in any national conversation.